New research into the genealogies of early Canadian pioneers suggests that the settlers who were first to colonize a new region produced more offspring than the settlers who followed them.

Until now, few studies have explored such consequences of range expansion on the modern human genome. Claudia Moreau from Hôpital Sainte-Justine at the Université de Montréal, along with colleagues from the Université du Québec à Chicoutimi, the University of Berne, and the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, made this discovery after studying the expansion of human colonies in Quebec, Canada, between 1686 and 1960.

Their study was published online by Science, at the Science Express Web site on 3 November.

“Moreau and colleagues have examined genealogies of a complete population occupying a recently settled region of Quebec using records that date as far back as the 17th century, comprising over one million individuals,” said Laura Zahn, senior editor at Science. “We are pleased to present this groundbreaking work on the interaction of geographic expansion and genetics of human expansions.”

Using old church registries, the researchers analyzed the genealogies of individuals who settled in Quebec and married there. They found that the settlers who colonized a new region of Quebec had significantly more children than those who lived within the core of an existing colony.

These early, fertile pioneers lived on the so-called “wave front,” or the edge of the expansion range, during their colonization of Quebec. They were the first generation of settlers to occupy an otherwise uninhabited region.

Quebec settlers Achille Bhérer and Hortense Gaudreault photographed in 1876 in Charlevoix with 7 of their 14 children.
[Picture courtesy of the Bhérer Family]View a larger version of this image\

“The wave front is a moving edge,” explained Laurent Excoffier, a corresponding author of the report. “This wave front is always at the periphery of the range. So individuals begin by colonizing a given region, which becomes the wave front by definition. Then, people send migrants toward new regions, which become the wave front in turn…and when a given territory has been fully settled, the wave front disappears since there is no wave of advance anymore.”

The full descent of their son, Edgar Bhérer, married to Délina Boivin. The picture was shot in 1960 for the celebration of Edgar and Délina 50th wedding anniversary in St-Félicien, Lac-Saint-Jean.
[Picture courtesy of the Bhérer Family]View a larger version of this image

Moreau and the researchers found that the majority of people currently living in the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean region of Quebec are related to ancestors who lived on—or close to—the wave front of colonization.

The researchers also discovered that women who settled on the wave front had 15% higher fertility rates than women who joined their colonies later. They suggest that this might be because, on average, women on the wave front married one year earlier than women who settled into the core of the population.

“The registries gave us information on the parents of all married individuals, including the time and place of their marriage,” said Excoffier. “The number of children those individuals had could be deduced from the data…We could actually count how many children each woman had, both on the wave front and in the core of the population.”

Since this increased reproductive success only seems to occur on the wave front, the researchers argue that fertility is a trait that can rapidly evolve during range expansion, passing from one generation to the next.

Damian Labuda,a co-author of the Science study from the Université de Montréal, takes questions from reporters at a 3 November press conference.
[Photo by Ginger Pinholster]

“In other words, this shows that the wave front created conditions that allowed natural selection to occur and populations to evolve,” explained Damian Labuda, a corresponding author of the report, at a 3 November press conference at the Université de Montréal. “We have studied the spread of a whole human population over a few centuries in a specific geographical region. We don’t know yet to what extent our results can be generalized for other human expansions in other regions of the world…However, we would speculate that similar processes might have occurred in other successful demographic expansions of farmers into new territories.”

“We think this heritability on the wave front and not in the core population is due to the fact that there is some competition for resources in the core, which prevents members of large families to access land and to get married early,” said Excoffier. “Since there is more land available on the front, there is less competition and, thus, this correlation persists there.”

Read the abstract, “Deep Human Genealogies Reveal a Selective Advantage to Be On an Expanding Wave Front,” by Claudia Moreau et al.

Listen to a 3 November press conference (edited) with the Science authors.

Listen to a 3 November press conference (edited) with the Science authors.

Listen to a 3 November press conference with the Science authors in French.